Panasonic PT-AE7000 vs. Epson Home Cinema 5010 Projector Comparison

November 25, 2011 - Art Feierman

2D Brightness - Epson HC5010 vs. Panasonic PT-AE7000

The Epson has the advantage here. No matter how we measure, the Epson is brighter. After normal best mode calibration, the Epson Home Cinema 5010 comes in at 630 lumens compared to only 442 lumens for the PT-AE7000. That makes the Epson 42% brighter. For those of you concerned about the audible noise (the Epson is noisier) of the projectors, the Epson is brighter in best mode, when running low power eco-mode, than the Pansasonic is, when running at full lamp power.

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When comparing brightest mode – after our quick-cal – tuning of their Dynamic modes, the Panasonic produced 1355 lumens, while the Home Cinema 5010 still managed 1660 lumens, which is over 22% brighter.

Bottom line, no contest. The Epson Home Cinema 5010 is brighter, noticeably so. Over the years the Epson’s have always been the brighter of the two. Whether it’s lamps, optical engine, or other aspects, that doesn’t seem to matter. Simply stated, on any size screen you choose, the Epson will be brighter. When in best movie mode, it will even be brighter when running in low (eco) power, where the lamp lasts a bit longer and you save on electricity, than the PT-AE7000 has at full power.

3D Brightness: Epson HC5010 vs. Panasonic PT-AE7000

Not so clear cut here. The Epson has two modes – 3D Cinema and 3D Dynamic. The Panasonic, on the other hand allows you to use your settings for any of the 2D modes – for 3D.

Considering one loses a good 75% of brightness, the Epson really does have an advantage if you want to run 3D based on a 6500K grayscale calibration, you won’t have a whole lot to work with with the Epson, and even less with the Panasonic. I’ve been saying since last year, that if you really want to watch 3D on anything as large as a typical 100″ screen, 600 to 800 lumens (2D measurment) s is going to leave you wanting more brightness.

The basic difference then, is that the Epson can do a respectable job with 3D, on under 100″ screens, while the Panasonic still comes up short, even on the smaller screens. Neither projector in “best” mode, without a high gain screen, is going to make everyone happy in your home theater or family room, if you choose a large screen, but the Epson has enough extra to do nicely on a 92″ screen, where the Panasonic wouldn’t be quite that bright on an 82″.

In brightest mode, however, using settings Mike came up with for our “tuned” “brightest” modes, the 20+% isn’t really very noticeable. I’d have to say both seem about the same. I do know that the Epson is pre-production while I’m not sure about the Panasonic (it was an open unit, but retail product was already shipping.) Pre-production units often measure a bit lower, but let’s just say that the Epson, despite the higher lumen claim, didn’t seem to be really brighter in 3D. It didn’t matter whether I was comparing when using the Epson 3D glasses, the Panasonic 3D glasses, or Sony’s “Offical” Playstation 3D glasses. They all appear to perform about the same. Because the Epson projector is pre-production, if previous years are any indication, Epson will want to swap out this one for a full production one, and ask me to remeasure.

Bottom Line on 3D brightness. In a calibrated mode, for those who don’t mind the image being what I consider a bit dim, the Epson has a significant advantage, but any advantage in brightest mode is minor, based on my side by side viewing. That minor difference does favor the Epson, but in it’s own right, not enough to be a key decision point.